The WRIT & WRAT provide evidence for concessions in education if necessary.

A breif summary of both tests can be seen below;

WRIT

The WRIT is a highly reliable assessment of cognitive abilities that can be used with individuals aged 4-85 years. The WRIT provides an estimate of cognitive ability for psychiatric or vocational rehabilitation evaluations; it also helps to identify learning disabilities, mental retardation, giftedness, neuropsychological impairments, and other exceptionalities. Taking less than 30 minutes to administer, the WRIT assesses both verbal and nonverbal abilities, yielding a Verbal IQ and a Visual IQ, which generate a General IQ when combined.

Features and benefits

Fast and reliable. Administration times average less than 30 minutes—yet the WRIT is as reliable as many lengthier measures.

Covers an extended age range. Only one set of materials is needed to assess preschool children as young as 4 years to adults aged 85 years.

Colorful, attractive, and engaging. Subtests encourage participation by individuals of all ages.

Test structure; Four subtests address specific abilities: The Vocabulary and Verbal Analogies subtests form the Verbal scale; the Matrices and Diamonds subtests form the Visual scale.

WRAT4

The widely respected WRAT4 accurately measures the basic academic skills of word reading, sentence comprehension, spelling, and math computation. This quick, simple, psychometrically sound assessment of a student’s important fundamental academic skills serves as an excellent initial evaluation, re-evaluation, or progress measure for any student—especially those referred for learning, behavioural, or vocational difficulties.

Features and benefits

Evaluates reading comprehension. The WRAT4 improves on its predecessor by adding a Sentence Comprehension subtest.

Extension of norms. Grade-based norms increase the usefulness of the test in Grades K-12, and age-based norms extend to age 94 years, allowing for standardized assessment of older adults’ literacy skills.

Parallel forms make retesting easy. The Blue and Green forms can be used interchangeably with comparable results, permitting retesting within short periods of time without practice effects. Alternate forms can also be combined into a single examination for a more qualitative assessment of academic skills.

Time-efficient. Assessments can be obtained in as little as 15 minutes for younger children and as little as 30 minutes for older children and adults.

Flexible. Use with individuals, or use with small groups (selected math and spelling areas) to identify those who need a more comprehensive evaluation.

Reliable and valid. Standardized on a representative national sample of over 3,000 individuals ranging in age from 5 to 94 years, the WRAT4 has been shown to be highly reliable and valid.

Test structure; The WRAT4 provides derived scores and interpretive information for four subtests: